Bangladesh May Day: Make jobs safe; punish the criminals
May 4, 2013
Tens of thousands of workers marched through central Dhaka,
Bangladesh’s capital, on May Day to demand the death penalty for the
owner of the Rana Plaza building that collapsed April 24 killing more than 525
workers, most of them young women, and injuring 2,500 more who were found
trapped in the rubble. Hundreds of young workers are still unaccounted for and
believed dead under the factory’s ruins.
Solidarity actions with Bangladeshi workers were also held in Cambodia and
in New York, Los Angeles and London, among many other places across the
globe.
The May Day marchers called for many Bangladeshi capitalists to be brought
to justice — and said that they are responsible for this crime that has
brought tragedy to Bangladesh’s working class. Yet the bigger corporate
criminals are located not in Bangladesh, but in the imperialist centers in
Europe, Canada and especially in the United States.
There, big-brand retailers — Walmart, H & M and Gap, for example
— set the demands for low prices and speedy deliveries that are the
basic causes for the murder of so many workers and for the slave-wages paid to
the 4 million Bangladeshis forced to eke out a living in the garment
sweatshops.
The march in Dhaka was not a silent one. On foot, in pickup trucks and on
motorcycles, the workers wound their way through the central city, waving the
Bangladeshi flag and banners, beating drums and chanting, “Direct
action!” and “Death penalty!” A spokesperson for the march
spoke from the back of a truck over a loudspeaker: “My brother has died.
My sister has died. Their blood will not be valueless.” (Associated
Press, May 1)
“Enough is enough,” said Liakot Khan, another protester, who
stressed:”The government should hang the proprietor and the factory
owners. We want justice for these murders.” (France 24, May 1)
On April 23, after deep cracks were found in Rana Plaza’s walls,
evacuation orders were given. Other businesses sent their employees home, but
the apparel factory owners ordered some 3,000 workers back to their workplaces
in the building, disregarding workers’ warnings in their rush to meet
production deadlines. Employees informed police and government officials about
the hazards, but no one shut the factories.
Bosses threatened to dock workers’ salaries or fire them if they
didn’t comply with the “return to work” directive. An hour
after they re-entered the factories, the building caved in.
The building’s owner, Sohel Rana, had maintained that the building
would be safe for 100 years, even though he was told of the imminent danger.
Moreover, he illegally had the top three floors of the eight-story building
added to the original structure. To top off the utter disregard for safety, the
building was erected on swampland in the first place.
Rana is now being questioned by police while under arrest. According to the
AP story, “He is expected to be charged with negligence, illegal
construction and forcing workers to join work, which is punishable by a maximum
of seven years in jail.”
“I want the death penalty for the owner of the building. We want
regular salaries, raises and absolutely we want better safety in our
factories,” said Mongidul Islam Rana, 18, no relative, who works in a
different garment factory.
In reaction to the mass uprising of the workers, the Bangladesh High Court
ordered the government to confiscate Rana’s property and to freeze the
assets of the Rana Plaza factory owners so the money can be used to pay the
salaries of their workers.
On the other hand, the government ordered its police to fire rubber bullets
at the protesting workers when they rebelled against the factory owners in
response to the building’s collapse. Up to now, no factory owner had ever
been found liable for a worker’s death. It’s no wonder, as these
business owners have power. Many are politicians. They hold 10 percent of
Parliament’s seats.
Factory fires have killed hundreds of clothing workers in recent years.
After the horrific inferno that killed 112 workers last November at Tazreen
Fashion factory, local garment manufacturers, the government and Western
companies were supposed to implement safety measures and address unsound
plants. But nothing has changed.
So far, the reaction of the big-brand retailers, as, for example, Disney,
has been to threaten to move their manufacture sources from Bangladesh to other
oppressed countries. These retailers have refused to take responsibility for
the costs of ensuring safety in the workplace. Their threat to move is
motivated by their fear that the justified worker uprising in Bangladesh will
increase the costs of production — and that the class struggle will
escalate even further.